10 Helpful Tips for Harvesting Your Garden on Time, Every Time

You put in all kinds of work to finally harvest, but how do you know when the time is right to pick?

This is a common question among gardeners. We have this misconception in our heads that what we do in our backyards is going to look identical to what we find on a grocery store shelf.

Also, we tend to be impatient and pick too soon, or get sidetracked and pick too late. All these things matter when harvesting a garden.

Helpful Tips for Harvesting Your Garden

If you are curious about how to pick your garden at the right time, here are some tips to help you along:

1. Check Your Garden Daily

When your garden begins to ripen, it will hit you all at once. It is the way the cookie crumbles. Therefore, it is important to check your garden every day.

If you don’t check your garden daily, you could not only miss out on produce, but you are leaving produce to rot in your garden. This draws pests which means your garden could quickly become overtaken with a disease.

None of this is good, which is why it is best to check your garden every day. This way you get the harvest you’ve worked hard for, and it can keep coming since there will be nothing there to draw bugs.

Also, keep in mind, if you pick your plants when they first ripen it encourages the plants to produce more in most cases.

2. Pick Small

Have you ever gone to pick a zucchini and it looks to be the size of a football? This is what we are trying to avoid with this tip.

If you do run across a football-sized zucchini, don’t toss. Instead, grate it and make delicious chocolate zucchini bread with it.

But we do want to avoid having to do this when possible. It is best to pick produce when it is smaller. This is the time most vegetable varieties are at their most tender, have better flavor, and haven’t developed as many seeds.

Circling back to our zucchini example, it is best to pick a zucchini when it is around six inches in length. It may not look like much, but if your plant is producing in high gear (as they usually do) you’ll have plenty to go around.

3. Be Gentle

Harvesting is a great job for kids. They find it fun to be allowed to pick things from plants, and it gets them outdoors too.

However, you need to be sure whether you have a child’s help, or you are harvesting alone you are careful with what you are harvesting.

Keep in mind, produce can be easily bruised. It is important to gently place the produce in the basket or bucket you are using to harvest with.

If you bruise the skin of the produce, it could lead to rot which will shorten the lifespan of the vegetable once harvested.

When this happens, you’ll have to cook it immediately or it could go bad. It is best to avoid this scenario all together instead of having to rush to cook up your harvest to not lose it.

By using a little care when picking your harvest, this can all be avoided. It is such a simple step to prevent a problem quickly and easily.

4. Use Large Enough Baskets

A way to make harvesting easier and also avoid bruising is to make sure you use large enough baskets to harvest with.

When I harvest, I prefer to use five-gallon buckets when picking green beans and large bushel baskets when harvesting fruits, tomatoes, eggplants, squash, lettuce, cabbage, and other larger plants.

If you don’t have either of these options on hand, consider using a clothes basket. You could also use a wash basin or a galvanized tub as well. If the vegetables have enough room to breathe, it should work.

5. Watch Where You Step

It is important you watch where you step when you are harvesting your vegetables. Gardens can be tight to maneuver in.

Therefore, you’ll need to make sure you either have clear walkways, or you watch where you put your feet.

Not only can you step on vegetables which need to be harvested without knowing it, but you could also step on plants too.

This could damage the plants and create openings for disease and pests to make their way to your plants and harm them.

In turn, this harms your harvest. It is amazing how something as small as watching where you step can be helpful to your garden and your harvest.

6. Keep Track

When you plant an entire garden, it can be difficult to keep up with what you planted, what variety you planted, how long it takes to reach harvest, and what the harvest should look like once you’ve reached that point.

You’ll need to be sure to keep track of the information to help you through harvest. If you know what variety you planted and how long it takes to reach harvest, you will know when to begin looking for a harvest from each plant.

Also, by knowing what variety you planted, you should know what the harvest should look like to help prevent harvesting mistakes.

For instance, if you planted a mega-variety of a fruit or vegetable, it would be terrible to harvest them early because you didn’t realize it was a larger variety. You would miss out on produce.

Yet, if you keep track of this information, you’ll harvest everything right on time and get the amount of produce you intended on having when you planted your garden.

7. Check for Disease

When you are harvesting your garden, it is a good time to check your plants’ health as well. You should check the leaves to see if there are any spots or discoloration.

These could be symptoms of a disease or pest which has moved in on your garden. If you feel like you rarely have the time to check on your plants, schedule it every day when you are outside picking.

This way, nothing should slip by you, and the health of your plants shouldn’t deteriorate either. It is another simple step, but one which could save your harvest.

8. Don’t be Unrealistic

When you grow your own vegetables, you will soon realize they don’t usually look like what you buy at the grocery store.

For instance, when you grow broccoli, the heads don’t get as large as the broccoli heads you buy at the grocery.

Having unrealistic expectations can cause you issues during harvest. You’ll watch the plants and ponder, “They don’t look like what I’m used to.”

Next thing you know, you keep waiting for them to look like what you are used to seeing, and they end up becoming rotten before you ever get to harvest them.

It is important to know what your harvest should look like. This way you’ll be prepared and not miss out on a perfect harvest because of expectations your garden simply can’t meet.

9. Harvest Stems Quickly

There are certain vegetables and herbs we eat which don’t produce fruit. We enjoy eating the actual plant.

Produce like herbs and lettuce should be picked early. This is when they are most tender and have the best flavor.

If you wait too long, they sometimes bolt which will change the texture and flavor of the harvest. You don’t want this.

In your harvest’s best interest, pick vegetables that are stem vegetables early on.

10. Let the Fruits Hang

There are some plants in your garden which you don’t eat. Instead, you eat the product of the plant.

For instance, plants like tomatoes, apple trees, peppers, and peaches are all products of a plant. You won’t want to pick these as early as possible.

Instead, leave them to ripen fully on the plant. This is important information to keep in mind when harvesting your garden.

This way, you won’t pick some varieties of vegetation too quickly.

Harvesting Specific Plants

Herbs

You will want to cut herbs back as frequently as possible. You can store them in a dry paper towel in your fridge to absorb any moisture they might produce.

You can also dry them as soon as you harvest them for longer storage.

Tomatoes

Different varieties of tomatoes produce different colored plants. When the plant has reached the designated color, you should check the tomato.

When the tomato releases easily from the stem, you know they are ripe.

Peppers

Peppers can be a guessing game. If they are green, you should be okay to pick them regardless of size.

The big thing with peppers is that you don’t want them to turn red, orange, or yellow because of their flavor changes.

Lettuce

Lettuce you will want to pick while it is still cooler outside. Use scissors to cut leaf lettuce.

Use a sharp knife to cut a whole head of lettuce when it has reached the desired size.

Green Beans

Green beans should be picked when they have almost reached their full size. You don’t want them to reach full maturity because they become tough and full of large beans.

Also, don’t pick them in the morning because they are still wet with dew. This could spread diseases among your crops.

Peas

Garden peas are a trial and error vegetable. When you see the peas forming pods, you can pick one to see what is inside.

When you open the pod, if the peas are the desired size, start picking. If not, wait a little longer to begin picking.

Melons

Melons are another item which is trial and error. The best way to know if a melon is ready to harvest is to thump it.

If you get a hollow sound, it should be ripe. You can also smell it. If there is a sweet aroma coming from it, they should be ripe.

Watermelon

Watermelon is an easier crop to harvest. You check the spot where the watermelon has been on the ground.

When the spot turns yellowish instead of brown or white, you know the watermelon is ready to harvest.

Cucumbers

You will need to check the variety of cucumber you planted. When you know, you will know what size the cucumber is supposed to reach.

When the cucumbers reach the correct size, you pick them. Keep a watchful eye because cucumbers are known for hiding among their leaves, and they grow quickly.

Corn

When you see your corn is making ears feel the ears to see if you can also feel the kernels inside them under the husk.

Also, see if the silk on top of the ear is drying. If so, find a kernel of corn and squeeze it. If you get a milk colored sap from the kernel, you’ll know your ears of corn are ready for harvest.

Root Vegetables

It is important to check what varieties of root vegetables you planted. You’ll need to know how long they take to harvest.

Around harvest date, you can begin checking them. Begin pulling out some root vegetables to see if they’ve grown to size yet. If you are satisfied with their size, begin harvesting your root vegetables.

Garlic

Garlic is another crop easy to harvest. You look at the tops of the garlic. When they have turned brown and fallen over, you’ll know the bulbs are ready.

However, when you harvest them, don’t wash them. Instead, allow them to dry out before you try to store them.

Eggplant

Eggplant tastes better when it is smaller. You’ll know it is ready because it should be firm and should also have a sheen to it.

When your eggplant is ready for harvest, be sure to cut it lose from the plant instead of pulling it.

Onions

When you see the tops of your onions flopped over, you’ll know it is time to dig the onions out. From there, you’ll need to store them.

Potatoes

Potatoes are another simple crop to harvest. Wait until the tops are dry and have turned brown before you being to harvest.

When this happens, begin digging up the potatoes. Be sure to start digging wide around the potatoes to keep from damaging them.

Well, you now know a few tips to make harvesting your garden easier. You also know how to harvest some of the most common garden vegetables.